Sulforaphane Half Life is 2.2 hours - Cure Parkinson's

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Sulforaphane Half Life is 2.2 hours

Bolt_Upright profile image
18 Replies

3 hours from ingesting sulforaphane to peak plasma level, 2.2 hour half life. Total elimination is reached in the 12th hour post-ingestion:

Sulforaphane - role in aging and neurodegeneration 2019 ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/labs/pmc/a...

"Absorption, distribution, metabolism, and elimination

Due to sulforaphane’s small molecular weight and its relatively high lipophilicity, it is rapidly absorbed in the jejunum across the enteric cells after oral administration (Petri et al. 2003). It reaches the highest concentrations in plasma 3 h after consumption (approximately 0.9 μmol/L), and slowly decreases after the second hour, having an approximate half-life of 2.2 h (Hanlon et al. 2008; Hu et al. 2004; Cramer and Jeffery 2011). When SFN is in the cells, it is metabolized by phase II and III enzymes, for example, glutathione S-transferase (GST) to form conjugated products such as sulforaphane-glutathione (SFN-GSH), sulforaphane-cysteine (SFN-Cys), sulforaphane N-acetyl cysteine (SFN-NAC), and sulforaphane-cysteinyl-glycine (SFN-CG), which are thought to be important for the activation of several SFN biological effects (Clarke et al. 2011). The primary sulforaphane metabolism sites are the intestinal walls; the liver, where it is conjugated with GSH; the kidney, where it is conjugated with NAC; and the bladder (Verkerk et al. 2009) and is accumulated mainly in those same organs, and in lower concentrations in plasma, skin, and lung tissues (Bricker et al. 2014). The excretion rate is higher at the 6th hour after administration (Atwell et al. 2015), excreting in urine SFN-NAC as a principal metabolite, and total elimination is reached in the 12th hour post-ingestion (Cramer and Jeffery 2011)."

In previous posts we have talked about how sulforaphane may amplify the circadian rhythm and therefore needs to be administered at a specific time (or else we may be counteracting our circadian rhythm). There was also a concern about the half life of sulforaphane being too long and lingering to mess with our circadian rhythm. if this paper is right, well maybe that is not a concern.

So... this makes me think if I take my sulforaphane early...

Take it at 8 AM and it will hit peak at 11 AM, be at half strength at 1 PM, and only a quarter strength at 3 PM. I don't know how long it is from peak plasma level to affecting clock genes and then amplifying the circadian rhythm. I'm hoping that part is quick (hope is not a plan).

I am trying to get up with the sun. Tomorrow dawn is 7:20 AM, so I will put my Koyah near my alarm clock and see if I can get the sprouts into me at near dawn.

I've gone to just tossing 2 grams of Koyah freeze dried broccoli sprouts in my mouth and having a tiny sip of water in the morning. I have no idea how much sulforaphane I am getting this way, but it makes the timing really easy.

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Bolt_Upright
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Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright

There is a sulforaphane trial going on for PD:

Updated 01/04/22: Here is the link to the trial: clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show...

This is the wrong link I originally included. Still a good article: ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/labs/pmc/a...

MBAnderson profile image
MBAnderson in reply to Bolt_Upright

attention Albert & Frank Mundo

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply to MBAnderson

What is Frank's handle? Put the @ in front of it to alert him. wriga

Rhyothemis profile image
Rhyothemis in reply to Bolt_Upright

that's a great review article, but where does it mention a trial for PD?

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply to Rhyothemis

Doh! Thanks! Fixed it: clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show...

MBAnderson profile image
MBAnderson

Dave, what do you to think of this? Look through their whole website.

broq.life/compare

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply to MBAnderson

Thank Marc! I think I may have to re-evaluate my choice of sulforaphane. Definitely need to keep digging here.

This is the PDF that shows all the comparative sulforaphane levels from the BROQ web site: 319ad92f-bfd8-408b-a929-e91...

Koyah
Missy0202 profile image
Missy0202 in reply to Bolt_Upright

I sprout my own seeds but have recently started taking BROQ. I hope it turns out to be a wise choice

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply to MBAnderson

So BROQ is Sulforaphane while Koyah is Glucoraphanin and Myrosinase. Sulforaphane is 70% absorbed, Glucoraphanin and Myrosinase is 30%. Hence wriga 's cooking method to get the Sulforaphane in the cup.

But cooking takes time and makes timing difficult.

Which brings me back to asking: What if I cook my broccoli tea the day before, but then add the mustard powder in the morning before drinking it? I could pull a small jar out of the fridge, add some mustard powder and shake it up, then go about my business for10 minutes, and then drink it down. Would that work?

MBAnderson profile image
MBAnderson in reply to Bolt_Upright

Don't know. That's a question for Albert.

The dose is 3 1/2 g, whereas BROQ says this 36 mg/dose (2 capsules.) Are you concerned taking 3400 mg?

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply to MBAnderson

I'm a bit confused by the fact that the BROQ compare page says with Koyah I get .36 mg per dose, but the report says I get 3.6 mg from 3.4 grams of powder.

I've actually been doing closer to 2 grams, so I'm either getting .2 mg or 2 mg of sulforaphane, but I think I could boost that (per Albert) if I went back to cooking it.

I think I will try my cooking, then refrigerating before adding mustard in the morning plan until I get this fully sorted. I am hoping to find a way to surpass 18 mg but do it on the cheap. Thanks.

wriga profile image
wriga in reply to Bolt_Upright

Hi folks, this is a very interesting post, made even more interesting by the link to the comparative tables added by Marc. I reccomend downloading these tables. The results are striking but not really surprising when you understand the science. I will ask Jed Fahey to comment on them. They are pretty well in line what Jed describes in his latest publications. We have to be a bit careful however because of how the tests were done, since the method used does not reflect the actual content of the products. The content of the gelules were added to water and allowed to react for 2 hours. They don't mention the temperature, but this is critical.

At room temperature, glucoraphanin will be converted in mostly to a nitrile compound rather than sulforaphane, due to the action of the ESP protein naturally present in broccoli seeds. Moreover at 20°C only part of the glucoraphanin will be extracted into the water even in 2 hours. The unextracted part is therefore not reported, but would normally be extracted during the digestive process.

At 60°C, much more glucoraphanin will be extracted into the water and the ESP protein will be deactivated but the myrosinase, if present will still be active. This is the optimum conversion temperature.

At 100°C the maximum amount of glucoraphanin will be extracted even in a few minutes, but both the ESP protein and the myrosinase will be destroyed, so the glucoraphanin will not be converted to sulforaphane.

In my Broccoli seed tea preparation, I now extract at 100°C for 5 minutes and then allow this tea to cool to just below 60C. I then add fresh myrosinase by sprinkling a little ground white mustard seed powder into the tea and wait 10 min for the conversion of glucoraphanin to sulforaphane. This optimizes the extraction of glucoraphanin (100°C) and then its conversion to sulforaphane when cooled to 60°C or lower.

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply to wriga

Hi wriga, stupid question, but this is how my brain works: We always say "let it cool to 60 degrees". I usually add cool water to get it to 60 degrees. Adding cool water is the same as letting it cool, right? Thanks!

wriga profile image
wriga in reply to Bolt_Upright

Yes, Bolt, 60°C is the optimum température to convert glucoraphanin to sulforaphane. It doesn't matter how you get to that temperature.

wriga profile image
wriga in reply to Bolt_Upright

Hi Bolt, yes that should work, but I would not add mustard powder to cold tea from the fridge. I would first warm it up to 60° to get the fastest conversion rate.

Rhyothemis profile image
Rhyothemis in reply to Bolt_Upright

Glad I check in from time to time - I see that BROCQ is the US version of Prostaphane. I had been hoping they would start selling it in the US. I will have to try it, esp. since I am gagging on the smoothie I just made. Late in the day already - I want to do it in the morning going forward. I made the tea out of sprouts as per Rhonda Patrick's video, then I added some mustard seed to the blender for good measure (usually I don't). ... not sure I can finish it ...

Also good news as perhaps my daughter can try BROCQ; she's allergic to a lot of things and is not able to stomach even a plain broccoli sprout smoothie.

Rhyothemis profile image
Rhyothemis

Thanks for this post. My timing has been off all this time ...

Bolt_Upright profile image
Bolt_Upright in reply to Rhyothemis

You are welcome. And please don't forget my science qualifications: High School Degree (and I bailed on chemistry because it was too hard).

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This was posted by Parkie-, 9 hours ago.